Are you Programming Yourself for Success or Failure?
Thursday, May 24, 2012 at 1:48PM
Dorene Robinson RDN CDN in cognitive restructuring, dieting, how to lose weight, self talk

It’s easy to want to lose weight. It’s another matter to actually want to embark on a new—healthy—lifestyle that requires eating better and exercising. After all it’s just human nature to want the prize without having to do the work.

The biggest obstacle between you and success with weight management however, probably isn’t eating better or even exercising—it’s very likely negative thinking and sabotaging self talk. It may never have occurred to you that long term success with weight management ultimately hinges on fixing your thinking.

Every time someone is successful with their weight you’ll find that they gave up their excuses and owned that they were responsible and in charge of their changing. For things to change you must change. Outside change depends on inside change.

“We all talk to ourselves. We may not want to admit it, but all thinking human beings have a constant stream-of-consciousness chatter going on,” says psychologist Stephen Gullo PhD. That stream-of-chatter essentially programs you for either success or failure.

The good news is that you can take control of your internal dialog so that it is programming you for success. Changing your thinking so that it supports you instead of sabotages you is called cognitive restructuring.

Cognitive restructuring is a proven behavioral strategy for successful weight control based on the premise that distorted or dysfunctional thinking strongly influences a person’s behavior. It involves identifying distorted thinking (self-defeating, false, and irrational beliefs) and replacing them with more rational, constructive thoughts and beliefs.

Examples of negative and sabotaging self talk:

False Beliefs: The interesting thing about false beliefs is that they provide convenient excuses for failure.

Unrealistic expectations:

Sabotaging self talk:

Basically, any change efforts are bound to fail if you don’t also change the internal conversation that you have been sabotaging yourself with. You can continue with a negative, pessimistic, defeatist and often self-demeaning internal dialog (and keep spinning your wheels)—or you can take control with an upbeat, winning attitude that supports success. Change your thinking and weight loss will naturally follow.

Examples of supportive and constructive self talk:

How to replace sabotaging self talk with constructive self talk:

  1. Start by tuning in and listening to your internal dialog so that you can begin to identify your “flawed thinking” and in each case write a constructive/supportive statement—or belief—that counters it.
  2. Create a personal set of 3x5 cards with your constructive statements and read them a minimum of twice each day. The more often the better!
  3. It’s also helpful to listen to yourself speak each of your new constructive beliefs and statements. An easy way to do that is to record a message on your cell phone that you can listen to several times a day.

Keep adding to your collection of supportive statements—every time you catch your internal dialog going negative, write a new supportive counter statement.

Immediately read or listen to your cards whenever you find yourself tempted to slip. Make sure you memorize some supportive one-liners too. The more you read—and listen to—your new constructive beliefs and statements, the faster your “new thinking” will be internalized. Essentially, what you are doing is waging an internal PR campaign that reprograms you for success!

Of course this all depends on your really wanting to change. If deep down you are not actually ready to give up being pessimistic, defeatist, and self critical you’ll make excuses for not identifying and fixing your sabotaging self talk. That’s okay—it just means you’re not yet ready to leave this self-defeating (crazy as it sounds) comfort zone. There are always costs as well as benefits to changing. You may need to let go of a martyr identity that “enjoyed” attention for failure. Shaking up your self concept is a cost—even if it’s for the better! Know, however, that serious success with your weight—the kind that lasts—will require dealing with any unsupportive self talk that holds you back. You can and will be successful as soon as YOU decide to be!

Best,
-Dorene

Article originally appeared on BeyondDiets.com (http://www.beyonddiets.com/).
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